More Health, Less Healthcare

Treating Neighborhoods as Patients: Hospital-Led Housing Initiatives

12 min · 15. juli 2026
episode Treating Neighborhoods as Patients: Hospital-Led Housing Initiatives cover

Description

Welcome back to More Health, Less Healthcare with Peter Boland. In this, we dive into why housing is far more than just a place to live—it's a clinical intervention that can shape the health of entire communities. Key Takeaways * Treating Neighborhoods as the Patient: Peter Boland explores how Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus redefined its mission, tackling intergenerational poverty by viewing the community itself as the patient. Investing in housing revitalization led to a 20.8% drop in ER visits and a 12.7% reduction in hospital admissions in targeted neighborhoods. * Institutional Investment Over Charity: Both Nationwide Children’s and Boston Medical Center demonstrate the power of allocating real capital—not just charitable donations—toward social infrastructure. Boston Medical Center devoted its entire $6.6 million Determination of Need fund to housing initiatives, securing long-term stability for patients with chronic health issues. * Integration as Prevention: Blue Cross Blue Shield of Minnesota’s Center of Prevention illustrates how scaling institutional efforts—integrating affordable housing, food access, and tobacco cessation—can transform both health outcomes and communities. Why It Matters Short-term thinking doesn’t move the needle on health equity or chronic disease. As Peter Boland puts it, “Institutions need to change, not people.” Long-term, strategic investments in housing create real and measurable health improvements.

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34 episodes

episode Treating Neighborhoods as Patients: Hospital-Led Housing Initiatives artwork

Treating Neighborhoods as Patients: Hospital-Led Housing Initiatives

Welcome back to More Health, Less Healthcare with Peter Boland. In this, we dive into why housing is far more than just a place to live—it's a clinical intervention that can shape the health of entire communities. Key Takeaways * Treating Neighborhoods as the Patient: Peter Boland explores how Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus redefined its mission, tackling intergenerational poverty by viewing the community itself as the patient. Investing in housing revitalization led to a 20.8% drop in ER visits and a 12.7% reduction in hospital admissions in targeted neighborhoods. * Institutional Investment Over Charity: Both Nationwide Children’s and Boston Medical Center demonstrate the power of allocating real capital—not just charitable donations—toward social infrastructure. Boston Medical Center devoted its entire $6.6 million Determination of Need fund to housing initiatives, securing long-term stability for patients with chronic health issues. * Integration as Prevention: Blue Cross Blue Shield of Minnesota’s Center of Prevention illustrates how scaling institutional efforts—integrating affordable housing, food access, and tobacco cessation—can transform both health outcomes and communities. Why It Matters Short-term thinking doesn’t move the needle on health equity or chronic disease. As Peter Boland puts it, “Institutions need to change, not people.” Long-term, strategic investments in housing create real and measurable health improvements.

15. juli 202612 min
episode What If They Got The Incentives Right? How Medically Tailored Food Programs Outperform Drugs in Clinical Outcomes artwork

What If They Got The Incentives Right? How Medically Tailored Food Programs Outperform Drugs in Clinical Outcomes

In our latest episode, Peter Boland dives deep into the fascinating and urgent topic of Food as Medicine—a movement proving that changing what's on our plates can save both lives and dollars. Key Takeaways * Geisinger Fresh Food Pharmacy * Peter Boland highlights that Geisinger’s program for type 2 diabetes achieved an 80% reduction in healthcare costs—dropping from $240,000 to just $48,000 per patient. Patients also saw improved HbA1c, lower BMI and blood pressure, and 10–50 pounds in weight loss. * Boston Medical Center’s Comprehensive Approach * The first hospital in the U.S. to fully integrate food as medicine, Boston Medical Center serves 7,000 people monthly—including a robust food pantry, rooftop farm, and teaching kitchen. Their efforts go further by embedding legal assistance to help patients with housing, utilities, and benefits issues. * Cleveland Clinic’s Group Appointments * Using shared medical appointments, patients support each other through lifestyle changes addressing root causes of chronic disease. Not only does this model increase efficiency, but the social reinforcement leads to better outcomes and reduced hospitalizations. “Food is medicine and the industry’s continued reluctance to treat it that way is costing money and lives at the same time.” — Peter Boland

8. juli 202612 min
episode What If Healthcare Incentives Were Right? Insights from Pathways, Houston Methodist, and Blue Cross artwork

What If Healthcare Incentives Were Right? Insights from Pathways, Houston Methodist, and Blue Cross

In our latest episode of More Health, Less Healthcare, Peter Boland tackles a fundamental question: What if the healthcare industry got the incentives right? Drawing from insights in the comprehensive Health Equity Case Studies Handbook, Peter Boland summarizes game-changing models and the powerful results that emerged when organizations shifted to pay-for-outcomes. Key Takeaways from the Episode * Pay for Outcomes, Not Activities: *  Most healthcare payments go toward procedures and visits, not true health improvements. Peter Boland challenges us to consider: What if we tied payment to real results, just like we do in other industries? * Success Stories Highlighted: * Pathways Community Hub: *  Community health workers are paid when problems are solved, not just for showing up. This model led to a dramatic increase in healthy birth weights and better prenatal outcomes. * Houston Methodist: *  Giving doctors access to monthly, personalized data on their practice resulted in lowered hospital admissions, fewer readmissions, and millions in shared savings. * Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts: *  Their alternative quality contract ties provider payments to patient outcomes and equity—not just volume. This approach slowed spending and improved care for all populations. * Measuring What Matters: *  Across the board, organizations that “measure what matters and tell the truth about it” saw behavior change and improved results. Despite abundant evidence, Peter Boland asks why the industry hasn’t widely adopted these models. The answer: it’s not a lack of information—the missing ingredient is institutional will.

1. juli 202618 min
episode The Hidden Tax on Motherhood: Unseen Costs and Community Impact artwork

The Hidden Tax on Motherhood: Unseen Costs and Community Impact

In our latest episode of More Health, Less Healthcare, Peter Boland uncovers a crucial and often overlooked issue: the “hidden tax” on motherhood. Unlike the taxes you see on receipts, this one is paid in hospital bills, lost wages, and missed life chances — with the biggest burden falling on those who can least afford it. These costs may be invisible, but their impact is real — affecting hospital bills, lost wages, long-term health, and community stability. As Peter points out at, the system’s shortcomings disproportionately affect families with fewer resources, stretching gaps in care into dangerous and expensive hazards. We all pay the price for a failing maternal health system, but not equally. Whether you’re a healthcare leader, employer, or policymaker, Peter calls for leadership and accountability: * Make maternal care essential * Prioritize prevention in benefits and policies * Track and address outcome disparities * As Peter closes, the real question is whether we keep ignoring this hidden tax — or decide, as a community and society, to change it.

17. juni 202613 min